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Old 28-03-2022, 08:01 PM #114
user104658 user104658 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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user104658 user104658 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2013
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kizzy View Post
I think there are many more people in higher council tax band on lower or fixed incomes due to the huge jump in housing cost over the last 20yrs.

In my area houses that were 70k in 99 are 250k today.



Also in cute villages the cost of homes has rocketed due to city dwellers buying up 2nd homes.



I didn't think there was such a thing as 100% council tax exemptions. .. don't they pay £125?
Council tax band isn't based on current house prices, it's (bizarrely) based on the value the property would have had if sold in 1991. That includes houses built after 1991... They assess new builds and make an estimate of what they would have been sold at 30 years ago. It's like they bodged the system together out of cardboard and tape... But for better or worse... That's genuinely how it works.

As for 100% exemptions I think that depends on what services are included... I know that when I was on the bennies in England we paid zero council tax (but had a separate water bill) whereas when we moved to Scotland we paid a small fixed amount of council tax because water services in Scotland are built into council tax, and you didn't get that part paid through housing benefit.

I don't really know the system these days as benefits were still all separate things back then, and it's all Universal Credit now.

I think there will definitely be people on low incomes who don't benefit from the council tax rebates (or any of the NI/income tax changes) but will still be hit with doubling energy bills.
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